It's Time for Students to Own the Student Record: B2C LMS Companion

Some learning management systems have half decent mobile functionality. Some actually appear to have been designed with students in mind. But the data and
work produced on them belongs to the institution. Finish the course, leave the school, and its all gone.

Now that learners are mobile, in terms of technology and degree completion strategies, wouldn't it be cool if they had an app that helped them make and
monitor academic plans, build a profile, and assemble a portfolio of personal bests?

The Data Backpacks paper recognized that they key to embracing privacy and personalization is permissions and portability. The paper was aimed at K-12, but
it may be even more important for postsecondary learners to be controlling and cultivating a portable professional profile.

A growing number of colleges encourage learners to launch and cultivate an online presence. Mary Washington University's Domain of One's Own is a good example.
MWU pays for the domain while students are enrolled and students pick up the tab when they leave school.

Similarly, secondary and postsecondary students should have cost free access to a personal companion to the school's learning management system, a business
to consumer (B2C) LMS companion that is a private portable profile. A permission system would allow the learner to decide what to share with whom.

The B2C LMS companion would have goal setting functionality like GoalBook, a cloud based portfolio system, and links
to social media. The postsecondary version could feature financial data: cost to complete, aid opportunities, and payment schedule.

Portable student profiles are part of what Phil Hill calls the shift from a walled garden approach to an open garden approach that allows the coordination of the
base system with external tools.

Professional schools hoping to support lifelong learning plans should
have particular interest in the B2C LMS companion. They may offer to sponsor the portable profile app so they can recommend learning experiences related to
individual development plans, certification requirements, and industry developments.

Rob Abel, CEO of IMS Global Learning Consortium, the interoperability folks, likes the idea of the LMS companion.
Following is a picture of how interoperability guys like Rob think about a bridge to the institutional LMS (and data) and a much more effective ecosystem
of educational apps outside the institution.

"I've had that picture and various versions of it for at least six to seven years now," said Abel. "We use that picture to rally some of the mobile-focused
suppliers on the idea." He's got meetings next month that may lead to a pilot project.

championed by Lonestar College System. At a community college convening, Lonestar chancellor Richard Carpenter challenged the audience of community
college leaders to transform what colleges can do for students by enabling students to "own the student record."

Carpenter said that institutions need to help students understand opportunities, create and organize the artifacts from their learning according to
critical competencies, and ultimately enable students to "take this with them" throughout their lives. (See feature on Quest, a great early college high school, a great partnership between
Lonestar and Humble ISD)

IMS open standards can play a vital role in opening up the data and work product created in a variety of EdTech and export to the student record, "The one
owned by the student of the future," according to Abel.

The LMS market (postsecondary and corporate training) has revenues of more than $3 billion. A new category of B2C LMS companions could add another $1
billion to the growing category and could boost efficacy, engagement and learner satisfaction along the way.

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